After numerous delays, alleged “potty peeper” Luke Chrisco was ruled mentally competent to stand trial by a Boulder District Court judge, but he likely will no longer represent himself at trial.

Judge Thomas Mulvahill ruled Thursday that, based on doctors’ evaluations, Chrisco, 31, is competent to stand trial on multiple counts of burglary and unlawful sexual contact. He is scheduled to be arraigned on those charges Aug. 10.

Chrisco was arrested last summer a few days after a woman using a portable toilet at a Boulder yoga festival noticed something moving in the tank and then saw a feces-stained man emerge from the toilet and run away.

According to police and court records, Chrisco — who was arrested by Vail police in an unrelated incident — told Boulder and University of Colorado police that he hid in crawl spaces and bathrooms around Boulder, including at CU, Naropa University, the Department of Motor Vehicles office and a number of businesses, in order to watch women use the toilet.

Police later found physical modifications in many of the locations that matched Chrisco’s descriptions of his hiding places.

Chrisco’s former attorney, Jason Savela, previously said he believed there was doubt about Chrisco’s mental competency and requested the review last October.

Mulvahill also appointed Curtis Ramsay as Chrisco’s attorney Thursday, meaning Chrisco will not represent himself, according to court officials.

Chrisco previously had argued that he wanted to represent himself using a “common law” defense, and Ramsay appeared at his last hearing as his “advising attorney.” Defendants who represent themselves are still allowed to have an attorney advise them on the law.

Deputy District Attorney Catrina Weigel said that with Ramsay now acting as Chrisco’s attorney in an official capacity, prosecutors will wait until Ramsay can review the case before they discuss whether the case will go to trial or if a plea deal could be struck.

Ramsay did not return calls for comment Thursday.

Chrisco was taken back into custody at the Boulder County Jail after being held at the state mental hospital during his evaluation.